Tiger Skin Rug by Joan Haig
Author:Joan Haig
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Europa Editions
Published: 2021-09-30T16:00:00+00:00
14
The Professorâs Note
It was early afternoon when we reached Coventry. Stuffy road fumes wrapped around us, but wild air from the flight still buzzed in our ears. Avoiding the busy centre and main roads, the tiger flew low to the ground behind supermarkets and metal warehouses. None of us uttered a word. As if we were on a haunted ride at a funfair, I half-expected a skeleton to spring out from behind a wheelie bin.
At the gates to a large post office depot we narrowly missed a horde of workers scattering out from their shifts. The tiger swerved and delved into a narrow street to avoid them. But halfway down the street, a postman was kneeling, rummaging in his parcel bag. Sharply, the tiger skidded into a tight alleyway, shrugging us off its back so we fell squarely and sorely on our bottoms.
The postman looked up in surprise. We jumped up and crowded together to block the alley where the tiger skin rug had parked itself. The postman, unlike the railway man at Waterloo, smiled kindly. His voice was nasal and clownish as if he were wearing a red rubber nose.
âHello there. Are you alright? You look lost.â
âYes, I mean, no. I mean, sort of.â I took a deep breath, like Joanna had told me to do, and tried again. âWeâre on our way to Coventry UniÂversity. Weâre, eh, visiting someone.â The postman smiled that way grown-ups sometimes do, secretly finding something amusing.
âAh, well, perhaps I can help you. Iâm going that way myselfâitâs up this lane to the main road, and pretty much a straight walk west from there. Come with me and Iâll set you in the right direction.â
We knew the rule that youâre not to talk to strangers, never go along with them anywhere. I hesitated. There was no backing out of the street, otherwise the postman might see the rug. But we couldnât go forwards either because that would be going with the postman, who, though in a tidy uniform and friendly, was still a stranger. We were stuck again.
I was waiting for the tiger to do something, willing it to do something, even disappear, so we could get out of this pickle, but the tiger did nothing. The postman stepped closer and I didnât like him doing that, even though he was trying to be helpful. Why couldnât Baba screech up now in his big red car and hoot its horn? Why couldnât we be back in Grannyâs kitchen eating pancakes and listening to stories?
âDonât be scared,â said the postman, âI donât bite. But I tell you what, Iâll give the community police officer a call. Lost children belong with police, not posties,â and he pulled a phone from his pocket. Jenny started poking me on the back.
âDo something, Lal.â
But I didnât know what to do. I knew how to sort a Rubikâs Cube, I could recite huge chunks of the BhaÂgavad Gitaâa gigantic Hindu verseâand Iâd recently hit the topmost level on my new computer game.
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